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Friday 3 May 2013

Portugal aims to cut 30,000 civil service jobs

The Portuguese government is planning to cut 30,000 civil service jobs and to raise the retirement age by one year to 66 as it tries to meet the terms of a bailout.

This is a step further towards generalized poverty in Portugal.
There are already thousands of children who go to school without breakfast and some are even withdrawn from their families that no longer are able to ensure them proper feeding, education, clothes,etc.
Portugal is facing the worst crisis of the last decades and nobody knows where it will lead nor when it will have an end or if it will ever have an end.

Portuguese Prime Minister Pedro Passos Coelho making an address to the nation, 3 May 2013
Prime Minister Pedro Passos Coelho said civil servants would also be required to work 40 hours a week instead of 35.
The proposals, which would be applied mostly from next year, would save 4.8bn euros (£4bn) over three years, he said.
Austerity measures have proved deeply unpopular and have triggered large protests.
"With these measures, our European partners cannot doubt our commitment" to the bailout, Mr Coelho said in an address to the nation late on Friday.
"To hesitate now would harm the credibility that we have already won back," he added.
Portugal received a 78bn euro bailout from the European Union, the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund in 2011.
Unemployment stands at nearly 18% - a record high - and the economy is expected to shrink for a third consecutive year in 2013.
Last month, the Portuguese Constitutional Court struck down more than 1bn euros (£847m; $1.3bn) of proposed cuts, which included the suspension of holiday bonuses for public sector workers and pensioners.
That forced the centre-right government to look elsewhere for savings - though it has ruled out raising taxes.
"We will not raise taxes to correct the budgetary problem resulting from the Constitutional Court's decision," Mr Coelho said.
"The way must be through the structural reduction of public spending."
Portugal's main Socialist opposition party has accused Mr Coelho of inflicting excessive austerity on Portugal in pursuit of an ideologically driven programme.
Adaptaed from BBC News

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